PhD Program
- Overview
The Department of Organismal Biology and Anatomy's (OBA) graduate
program in Integrative Biology trains students
to pose strongly interdisciplinary research questions across fields
in biology and among levels of biological organization. Faculty
in our department engage a diverse range of topics in biology in
the broad contexts of understanding how animals develop, evolve,
and function. Please explore the faculty
pages for details on the full breadth of research interests
represented in the department.
OBA's graduate student curriculum permits students to develop
their own research focus and PhD project while also building a strong
foundation in integrative biology under the active mentorship of
our diverse faculty. Students in OBA take a variety of core and
elective courses in which they are introduced to both to faculty
research and to approaches to integrative research in organismal
biology. Our students have the opportunity to utilize the diversity
of expertise at the University of Chicago and affiliated institutions
including the Field
Museum and Argonne
National Laboratory and to take courses across the
sciences and beyond. Beyond our thriving departmental academic community,
there are numerous weekly seminar series exemplifying diverse aspects
of the biological sciences (for example, evolution, ecology, behavior,
integrative biology, development, genetics and molecular biology,
neurobiology and computational neuroscience) that bring in researchers
from around the world.
This is a particularly exciting time to be an integrative biologist.
Recent advances in research tools and technology in molecular biology,
neurobiology, genetics, scientific visualization, and computational
biology are providing new opportunities to approach biological questions
with fresh perspectives and to explore new directions through interdisciplinary
research.
• Application Procedure
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